|

By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press
Service
FORT JACKSON, S.C. -- "You have a
length of rope and you have to get your team and all your
gear up that 15-foot wall. Oh, and you can't touch anything
below four-and-a-half feet. That's contaminated. Time is of
the essence. Do you have any questions?"
|

|
|
|
A soldier back crawls
under barbed wire during Victory Forge
exercises at Fort Jackson, S.C..
Lance Cpl. Michael J.Supples
|
|
The lead soldier asked no
questions. She eyed the 15-foot concrete wall, the front of
a World War II-style bunker. Basic trainees here use it as a
training prop during Victory Forge.
"I could tell her more if she'd
just ask," said the drill sergeant after the soldier went
back to her platoon. "It's still the first day. They'll
learn by the end of Victory Forge."
Victory Forge is a 72-hour exercise
that climaxes Army basic training at this post. The Army
created Victory Forge using the Marine Corps' 54-hour-long
Crucible as a model. While the Crucible and Victory Forge
rely on team-building exercises, the big differences are
that Army men and women train together and their exercise is
totally tactical -- conducted as if in a combat zone. Marine
men and women train separately, and the Crucible is a
training environment.
The operations order to Delta
Company, 2nd Battalion, 60th Infantry, is a dry read.
"Company will conduct Victory Forge Operations in vic[inity]
of [Defensive Position] Dog House. This will consist of the
company breaking down into three mega squads per platoon.
Each mega squad will be sent to recover a downed pilot and
encounter a series of tactical obstacles and teamwork
building challenges, to include a squad-on-squad
ambush."
|

|
|
|
A soldier keeps alert
during Victory Forge at Fort Jackson, S.C.
The 72-hour tactical exercise, conducted
as if in combat, climaxes Army basic
training at Jackson.
Lance Cpl. Michael J. Supples
|
|
Reading about the operation is
one thing, confronting the reality of a 15-foot cement wall
is another. The young soldiers have to scale the wall, get
all their gear up it and continue their mission.
The leader went back to the
treeline where the squad had taken up position. She briefed
her squadmates and got their input. Then, they approached
the wall. Some soldiers established security while others
picked up the rope to see what they could do.
"How about this tree right here?"
asked one recruit. "I can get up that tree and carry the
rope after me."
The troops agreed to try it. The
tree was about six inches in diameter at the bottom, but got
smaller quickly. Still, the soldier was able to get up the
tree, but found he was too far from the top of the wall.
"Push me over to it," he said. Three soldiers started
leaning the tree toward the bunker. Finally, he reached it
and clambered over.
"I'm going to attach the rope to a
tree up here," he said, and did so. As he readied to throw
the rope down, the leader reminded everyone to catch the
rope.
"It can't touch the contaminated
area," she warned.
Once the rope was down, the
soldiers debated how to get everyone up. "Let's tie the gear
to the rope and we can haul it up together," suggested
one.
|

|
|
|
Soldiers use ingenuity,
web belts and three boards to cross a
"river" at Fort Jackson, S.C. The soldiers
were taking part in Victory Forge, the
72-hour tactical exercise climaxes Army
basic training at Jackson.
Lance Cpl. Michael J. Supples
|
|
"No, let's try to climb
wearing our gear," said another.
They all looked to the leader.
"Let's try it with gear first," she said.
They hoisted a tall soldier wearing
his backpack and carrying his weapon up over the
contaminated area. He grabbed the rope and, after much
pushing and pulling, managed to get over the top. "That's
not going to work for everyone," he said.
"How about knots in the rope?" a
soldier asked. The two on the top tied knots. Unfortunately,
they were slipknots, and the next soldier up learned how
they got that name.
"C'mon, people! We're running out
of time!" the leader said.
The soldiers ultimately modified
their plan and started getting people and gear to the top.
At one point, they decided to throw their M-16s to the
top.
"I don't think you better do that,"
warned their drill sergeant, who until that point had stayed
on the sidelines. Instead, they tied their gear to the rope
and hauled it up.
One of the soldiers touched the
contaminated area and was declared a casualty. "You've got
to take him with you," the drill sergeant said. "And he
can't move now." The soldiers rigged a sling and hauled the
casualty to the top.
|

|
|
|
Teamwork gets a soldier
over the wall during Victory Forge
exercises at Fort Jackson, S.C. The
72-hour tactical exercise climaxes Army
basic training at Jackson.
Lance Cpl. Michael J.
Supples
|
|
Finally, all soldiers and gear
made the top -- but not in the time allotted.
The drill sergeant gathered the
squad. "Okay, leader. What did we learn?" he asked.
"Drill sergeant, I guess we learned
to discuss the plan more fully," she said. "We just sort of
came up and tried the first thing that came to our minds. We
also learned that we have to move quicker."
"Right. Did you modify your
plan?"
A chorus of yeses. "We had to,
drill sergeant," another soldier said. "In fact, we had to
modify just about everything. We especially had to modify it
when we had a casualty."
"OK. Get the equipment back in
place and let's get ready to move," said the drill sergeant.
"You still have a lot left to do."
It was, after all, just the
beginning of Victory Forge.
Printer-Friendly Version
|